Classic Audiobook Collection - The Biography of a Grizzly by Ernest Thompson Seton ~ Full Audiobook [biography]

Episode Date: December 26, 2022

The Biography of a Grizzly by Ernest Thompson Seton audiobook. Genre: biography In The Biography of a Grizzly, Ernest Thompson Seton tells the life story of a wild bear with the attention and dignity... usually reserved for human heroes. From his first uncertain steps in the mountain forests to his rise as a powerful, wary survivor, the grizzly (often known as Wahb) learns the hard rules of a world shaped by hunger, weather, territory, and relentless danger. Guided by instinct and hard-won experience, he navigates rival predators, shifting seasons, and the ever-tightening presence of people - traps, rifles, poisoned bait, and the steady pressure of settlement. Seton blends vivid natural observation with a dramatic narrative voice, inviting listeners to see the landscape through the bear's senses: scent on the wind, the language of tracks, the promise and peril of open meadows. As Wahb grows older and more formidable, his struggles become as much about memory and caution as about strength, raising questions about what civilization calls 'vermin' and what nature calls a life. This is a gripping, empathetic portrait of endurance at the edge of the human frontier. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:35:04) Chapter 02 (01:04:38) Chapter 03 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Biography of a Grizzly by Ernest Thompson Seton. Part 1. The Cub Hood of Wahab He was born over a score of years ago, away up in the wildest part of the Wild West, on the head of the little piney, above where the Pallet Ranch is now. His mother was just an ordinary silver tip, living the quiet life that all bears prefer,
Starting point is 00:00:27 minding her own business and doing her duty by her, family, asking no favors of anyone excepting to let her alone. It was July before she took her remarkable family down the little piney to the gray bowl and showed them what strawberries were and where to find them. Notwithstanding their mother's deep conviction, the cubs were not remarkably big or bright, yet they were a remarkable family, for there were four of them, and it is not often a grisly mother can boast of more than two. The woolly-coated little creatures were having a fine time, and reveled in the lovely
Starting point is 00:01:08 mountain summer and the abundance of good things. Their mother turned over each log and flat stone they came to, and the moment it was lifted they all rushed under it like a lot of little pigs to lick up the ants and grubs they are hidden. It never once occurred to them that Mammy's strength might fail something. time, and let the great rock drop just as they got under it. Nor would any one have thought so that might have chance to see that huge arm, and that shoulder sliding about under the great yellow robe she wore.
Starting point is 00:01:43 No, no, that arm could never fail. The little ones were quite right. So they hustled and tumbled one another at each fresh log in their haste to be first, and squealed little squeals and growled little growled. as if each was a pig, a pup, and a kitten all rolled into one. They were well acquainted with the common little brown ants that harbor under logs in the uplands, but now they came for the first time on one of the hills of the great, fat, luscious wood ant, and they all crowded around to lick up those that ran out.
Starting point is 00:02:23 But they soon found that they were licking up more cactus prickles and sand than ants, till their mother said in grizzly, "'Let me show you how.' She knocked off the top of the hill, then laid her great paw flat on it for a few moments, and as the angry ants swarmed onto it, she licked him up with one lick, and got a good rich mouthful to crunch
Starting point is 00:02:49 without a grain of sand or a cactus stinger in it. The Cubs soon learned. each put both his little brown paws so that there was a ring of paws all around the ant-hill and there they sat like children playing hands and each licked first the right and then the left paw or one cuffed his brother's ears for licking a paw that was not his own till the ant-hill was cleared out and they were ready for a change.
Starting point is 00:03:20 Ants are sour food and made the bears thirsty so the old one led down to the river. After they had drunk as much as they wanted and dabbled their feet, they walked down the bank to a pool where the old one's keen eye caught sight of a number of buffalo fish basking on the bottom. The water was very low, mere pebbly rapids between these deep holes. So Mamie said to the little ones,
Starting point is 00:03:48 Now you all sit there on the bank and learn something new. First she went to the lower end of the pool and stirred up a cloud of mud which hung in the still water and sent the long tail floating like a curtain over the rapids just below. Then she went quietly round by land and sprang into the upper end of the pool with all the noise she could. The fish had crowded to that end, but this sudden attack sent them off in a panic, and they dashed blindly into the mud cloud. out of fifty fish there was always a good chance of some being fools and half a dozen of these dashed through the darkened water into the current and before they knew it they were struggling over the shingly shallow the old grizzly jerked them out to the bank and the little ones rushed noisily on these funny short snakes that could not get away and gobbled and gorged till their little bellies looked like balloons they had eaten so much now and the sun was so hot that all were quite sleepy so the mother bear led them to a quiet little nook and as soon as she lay down though they were puffing with heat they all snuggled around her and went to sleep with their little brown paws curled in and their little black noses tucked into their wool as though it were a very cold day after an hour or two they began to yawn and stretch themselves except little fuzz the smallest
Starting point is 00:05:26 she poked out her sharp nose for a moment then snuggled back between her mother's great arms for she was a gentle petted little thing the largest the one afterward known as wahab the one afterward known as wahabh sprawled over on his back and began to worry a root that stuck up, grumbling to himself as he chewed it, or slapped it with his paw for not staying where he wanted it. Presently Mooney, the mischief, began tugging at Frizzle's ears, and got his own well-boxed. They clenched for a tussle, then, locked in a tight little grizzly yellow ball. They sprawled over and over on the grass, and before they knew it, down a bank and a wick and way out of sight toward the river. Almost immediately there was an outcry of yells for help from the little wrestlers.
Starting point is 00:06:19 There could be no mistaking the real terror in their voices. Some dreadful danger was threatening. Up jumped the gentle mother, changed into a perfect demon, and over the bank in time to see a huge range bull make a deadly charge at what he doubtless took for a yellow dog. in a moment all would have been over with frizzles for he had missed his footing on the bank but there was a thumping of heavy feet a roar that startled even the great bull and like a huge bounding ball of yellow fur mother grizzly was upon him him the monarch of the herd the master of all these plains what had he to fear he bellowed his deep war cry and charred and charred the monarch of the herd the master of all these plains what had he to fear he bellowed his deep war-cry and charmed charged to pin the old one to the bank.
Starting point is 00:07:12 But as he bent to tear her with his shiny horns, she dealt him a stunning blow, and before he could recover, she was on his shoulders, raking the flesh from his ribs with sweep after sweep of her terrific claws. The bull roared with rage and plunged and reared, dragging Mother Grizzly with him. Then, as he hurtled heavily off the slope,
Starting point is 00:07:39 she let go to save herself and the bull rolled down into the river this was a lucky thing for him for the grizzly did not want to follow him there so he waited out on the other side and bellowing with fury and pain slunk off to join the herd to which he belonged old colonel picket the cattle king was out riding the range the night before he had seen the new moon descending over the white cone of picket's peak i saw the last moon over frank's peak said he and the luck was against me for a month now i reckon it's my turn next morning his luck began a letter came from washington granting his request that a post-office be established at his ranch and contained the polite inquiry what name do you suggest for the new post-office the colonel took down his new rifle a forty-five ninety repeater "'May as well,' he said. "'This is my month.' And he rode up the gray bull to see how the cattle were doing. As he passed under the Rim Rock Mountain, he heard a faraway roaring as of bulls fighting,
Starting point is 00:08:57 but thought nothing of it till he rounded the point and saw on the flat below a lot of his cattle, pawing the dust and bellowing as they always do when they smell the blood of one of their number. He soon saw that the great bull, the boss of the bunch, was covered with blood. His back and sides were torn as by a mountain line, and his head was battered as by another bull. Grizzly, growled the colonel, for he knew the mountains. He quickly noted the general direction of the bull's back trail, then rode toward a high bank that offered a view. This was across the gravelly ford of the gray bull, near the mouth of the piney.
Starting point is 00:09:40 His horse splashed through the cold water and began jerkily to climb the other bank. As soon as the rider's head rose above the bank, his hand grabbed the rifle, for there in full sight were five grizzly bears, and old one end four cubs. "'Run for the woods!' growled the mother grizzly, for she knew that men carried guns.
Starting point is 00:10:06 Not that she feared for herself. but the idea of such things among her darlings was too horrible to think of she set off to guide them to the timber tangle on the lower piny but an awful murderous fusillade began bang and mother grizzly felt a deadly pang bang and poor little fuzz rolled over with a scream of pain and lay still with a roar of hate and fury mother grizzly turned to attack the enemy me bang and she fell paralyzed and dying with a high shoulder shot and the three little cubs not knowing what to do ran back to their mother bang bang and mooney and frizzle sank in dying agonies beside her and wab terrified and stupefied ran in a circle about them then hardly knowing why he turned and dashed into the timber tangle and disappeared as a last bang left him with a stinging pain and a useless broken hind paw that is why the post-office was called four bears the colonel seemed pleased with what he had done indeed he told of it himself but away up in the woods of anderson's peak that night a little lame grizzly might have been seen wandering limping along leaving a bloody spot each time he tried to set down his hind paw, whining and whimpering,
Starting point is 00:11:44 Mother, Mother, oh, Mother, where are you? For he was cold and hungry, and had such a pain in his foot. But there was no mother to come to him, and he dared not go back where he had left her, so he wondered aimlessly about among the pines. Then he smelled some strange animal smell, and heard heavy footsteps, and not knowing what else to do he climbed a tree presently a band of great long-necked slim-legged animals taller than his mother came by under the tree he had seen such once before and had not been afraid of them then because he had been with his mother but now he kept very quiet in the tree and the big creatures stopped picking the grass when they were near him and blowing their noses ran out of sight he stayed in the tree till near morning and then he was so stiff with cold that he could scarcely get down but the warm sun came up and he felt better as he sought about for berries and ants for he was very hungry
Starting point is 00:12:53 then he went back to the piney and put his wounded foot in the ice-cold water he wanted to get back to the mountains again but still he felt he must go to where he had left his mother and brothers when the afternoon grew warm he went limping down the stream through the timber and down on the banks of the gray bull till he came to the place where yesterday they had had the fish feast and he eagerly crunched the heads and remains that he found but there was an odd and horrid smell on the wind. It frightened him, and as he went down to where he had last seen his mother, the smell grew worse. He peeped out cautiously at the place, and saw there a lot of coyotes tearing at something. What it was he did not know, but he saw no mother,
Starting point is 00:13:47 and the smell that sickened and terrified him was worse than ever, so he quietly turned back toward the timber, of the lower piney, and never more came back to look for his lost family. He wanted his mother as much as ever, but something told him it was no use. As cold night came down, he missed her more and more again, and he whimpered as he limped along a miserable, lonely little motherless bear, not lost in the mountains, for he had no home to seek, but so sick and lonely, and was so sick. such a pain in his foot and in his stomach a craving for the drink that would never more be his.
Starting point is 00:14:33 That night he found a hollow log, and crawling in, he tried to dream that his mother's great furry arms were around him, and he snuffled himself to sleep. Wahab had always been a gloomy little bear, and the string of misfortunes that came on him, just as his mind was forming, made him more than ever, sullen and more. Morose. It seemed as though everyone were against him. He tried to keep out of sight in the upper woods of the piney, seeking his food by day and resting at night in the hollow log. But one evening he found it occupied by a porcupine as big as himself, and as bad as a cactus bush. Wahab could do nothing with him. He had to give up the log and seek another nest.
Starting point is 00:15:24 One day he went down on the gray bull flat to dig some roots that his mother had taught him were good, but before he had well begun, a grayish-looking animal came out of a hole in the ground and rushed at him hissing and growling. Wahab did not know it was a badger, but he saw it was a fierce animal as big as himself. He was sick and lame, too, so he limped away and never stopped till he was on a ridge in the next canyon. Here a coyote saw him and came bounding after him, calling at the same time to another to come and join the fun. Wab was near a tree, so he scrambled up to the branches. The coyotes came bounding and yelping below, but their noses told them that this was a young grizzly they had chased,
Starting point is 00:16:16 and they soon decided that a young grizzly in a tree means a mother grizzly not far away, and they had better let him alone. after they had sneaked off wab came down and returned to the piny there was better feeding on the gray bull but every one seemed against him there now that his loving guardian was gone while on the piny he had peace at least sometimes and there were plenty of trees that he could climb when an enemy came his broken foot was a long time in healing indeed it never got quite well the wound healed and the soreness wore off, but it left a stiffness that gave him a slight limp, and the sole balls grew together quite unlike those of the other foot. It particularly annoyed him when he had to climb a tree or run fast from his enemies, and of them he found no end, though never once did a friend cross his path.
Starting point is 00:17:19 When he lost his mother, he lost his best and only friend. she would have taught him much that he had to learn by bitter experience and would have saved him from most of the ills that befeld him in his cubhood ills so many and so dire that but for his native sturdiness he never could have passed through alive the pinions bore plentiful that year and the winds began to shower down the rich ripe nuts life was becoming a little easier for wahab he was gaining in health and strength, and the creatures he daily met now let him alone. But as he feasted on the pinions one morning after a gale, a great black bear came marching down the hill. No one meets a friend in the woods was a byword that Wahab had learned already. He swung up the nearest tree.
Starting point is 00:18:18 At first the black bear was scared, for he smelled the smell of grizzly, but when he saw it was only a cub, He took courage and came growling at Wahab. He could climb as well as the little grizzly or better. And high as Wahab went, the black bear followed. And when Wahab got out on the smallest and highest twig that would carry him, the black bear cruelly shook him off, so that he was thrown to the ground, bruised and shaken, and half-stunned.
Starting point is 00:18:48 He limped away, moaning, and the only thing that kept the black bear from following him up and perhaps killing him, was the fear that the old grizzly might be about. So Wahab was driven away down the creek from all the good Pignon woods. There was not so much food on the gray bull now. The berries were nearly all gone. There were no fish or ants to get, and Wahab hurt, lonely and miserable, wandered on and on till he was a way down toward the Matissee.
Starting point is 00:19:23 A coyote came bounding and barking through the sagebrush after him. Wahab tried to run, but it was no use. The coyote was soon up with him. Then, with a sudden rush of desperate courage, Wahab turned and charged his foe. The astonished coyote gave a scared yelp or two and fled with his tail between his legs. Thus Wahab learned that war is the price of peace.
Starting point is 00:19:51 But the forage was a little bit of peace. was poor here there were too many cattle and Wahab was making for a far-away Pinyon woods in the Matizi canyon when he saw a man just like the one he had seen on that day of sorrow at the same moment he heard a bang and some sagebrush rattled and fell just over his back all the dreadful smells and dangers of that day came back to his memory and Wahab ran as he never had run before. He soon got into a gully and followed it into the canyon. An opening between two cliffs seemed to offer shelter, but as he ran toward it, a range
Starting point is 00:20:36 cow came trotting between, shaking her head at him, and snorting threats against his life. He leaped aside upon a long log that led up a bank, but at once a savage bobcat appeared on the other end and warned him to go back. It was no time to quarrel. Bitterly Wahab felt that the world was full of enemies, but he turned and scrambled up a rocky bank into the Pinyon woods that bordered the benches of the Matizi. The pine squirrels seemed to resent his coming and barked furiously.
Starting point is 00:21:12 They were thinking about their Pinyon nuts. They knew that this bear was coming to steal their provisions, and they followed him overhead to scold and abuse him with such an outcry that an enemy might have followed him by their noise, which was exactly what they intended. There was no one following, but it made Wahab uneasy and nervous. So he kept on till he reached the timber line, where both food and foes were scarce,
Starting point is 00:21:43 and here on the edge of the mountain sheep land at last he got a chance to rest. Wahab never was sweet-tempered like his baby sister, and the persecutions by his numerous foes were making him more and more sour. Why could they not let him alone in his misery? Why was everyone against him? If only he had his mother back, if he could only have killed that black bear that had driven him from his woods. It did not occur to him that some day he himself would be big.
Starting point is 00:22:19 and that spiteful bobcat that took advantage of him and the man that had tried to kill him he did not forget any of them and he hated them all wahab found his new range fairly good because it was a good nut here he learned just what the squirrels feared he would for his nose directed him to the little granaries where they had stored up great quantities of nuts for winter's use it was hard on the squirrels but it was good luck for wahab for the nuts were delicious food and when the day shortened and the nights began to be frosty he had grown fat and well favored he traveled over all parts of the canyon now living mostly in the higher woods but coming down at times to forage almost as far as the river one night as he wondered by the deep water a peculiar smell reached his nose. It was quite pleasant, so he followed it up to the water's edge. It seemed to come from a sunken log. As he reached over toward this, there was a sudden clank, and one of his paws was caught in a strong steel beaver trap. Wahab yelled and jerked back with all his strength and tore up the stake that held the trap. He tried to shake it off, then ran away through the
Starting point is 00:23:48 bushes trailing it. He tore at it with his teeth, but there it hung, quiet, cold, strong, and immovable. Every little while he tore at it with his teeth and claws or beat it against the ground. He buried it in the earth, then climbed up a low tree, hoping to leave it behind, but still it clung biting into his flesh. He made for his own woods, and sat down to try to puzzle it out. He did not know what it was, but his little green-brown eyes glared with a mixture of pain, fright, and fury as he tried to understand his new enemy. He lay down under the bushes and intent on deliberately crushing the thing. He held it down with one paw, while he tightened his teeth on the other end, and, burying down as it slid away, the trap-jawed opened, and the foot
Starting point is 00:24:44 was free. It was mere chance, of course, that led him to squeeze both springs at once. He did not understand it, but he did not forget it, and he got these not very clear ideas. There is a dreadful little enemy that hides by the water and waits for one. It has an odd smell. It bites one's paws and is too hard for one to bite, but it can be got off by hard squeezing. For a week or more, a little grizzly had another sore paw, but it was not very bad if he did not do any climbing. It was now the season when the elk were bugling on the mountains. Wahab heard them all night, and once or twice had to climb to get away from one of the big antlered bulls. It was also the season when the trappers were coming into the mountains,
Starting point is 00:25:38 and the wild geese were honking overhead. There were several. quite new smells in the woods, too. Wahab followed one of these up, and it led to a place where there was some small logs piled together, then mixed with the smell that had drawn him, was one that he hated. He remembered it from the time when he had lost his mother. He sniffed about carefully,
Starting point is 00:26:02 for it was not very strong and learned that this hateful smell was on a log in front, and the sweet smell that made his mouth water was under some brush behind, so he went around, pulled away the brush till he got the prize, a piece of meat, and as he grabbed it, the log in front went down with a heavy chunk. It made Wahab jump, but he got away all right with the meat and some new ideas, and with one old idea made stronger, and that was, When that hateful smell is around, it always means trouble.
Starting point is 00:26:41 As the weather grew colder, Waha became very sleeping. He slept all day when it was frosty. He had not any fixed place to sleep in. He knew a number of dry ledges for sunny weather, and one or two sheltered nooks for stormy days. He had a very comfortable nest under a root, and one day as it began to blow in snow, he crawled into this and curled up to sleep.
Starting point is 00:27:09 The storm howled without. The snow fell deeper and deeper. It draped the pine trees till they bowed, then shook themselves free to be draped anew. It drifted over the mountains and poured down the funnel-like ravines, blowing off the peaks and ridges and filling up the hollows level with their rims. It piled up over Wahab's den, shutting out the cold of the winter, shutting out itself. And Wahab slept and slept. He slept all winter without waking, for such as the way of bears,
Starting point is 00:27:45 and yet when spring came and roused him, he knew that he had been asleep a long time. He was not much changed. He had grown in height, and yet was but little thinner. He was now very hungry, and forcing his way through the deep drift that still lay over his den, he set out to look for food. There were no peasant.
Starting point is 00:28:10 your nuts to get and no berries or ants. But Wahab's nose led him away up the canyon to the body of a winter-killed elk, where he had a fine feast and then buried the rest for future use. Day after day, he came back till he had finished it. Food was very scarce for a couple of months, and after the elk was eaten, Wahab lost all the fat he had when he awoke. One day he climbed over the divide into the Warhouse Valley. It was warm and sunny there. Vegetation was well advanced, and he found good forage. He wandered down toward the thick timber and soon smelled the smell of another grizzly. This grew stronger and led him to a single tree by a bear trail. Wahab reared up on his hind feet to smell this tree. It was strong of bear, and was plastered with mud and
Starting point is 00:29:06 grizzly hair far higher than he could reach, and Wahab knew it must have been a very large bear that had rubbed himself there. He felt uneasy. He used long to meet one of his own kind, yet now that there was a chance of it he was filled with dread. No one had shown him anything but hatred in his lonely, unprotected life, and he could not tell what this older bear might do. As he stood in doubt, he caught sight of the old grizzly himself, slouching along a hillside, stopping from time to time to dig up the Quamash roots and wild turnips. He was a monster. Wahab instinctively distrusted him, and sneaked away through the woods and up a rocky bluff where he could watch. Then the big fellow came on Wahab's track and rumbled a deep growl of
Starting point is 00:30:02 anger. He followed the trail to the tree, and, rearing up, he tore the bark with his claws, far above where Wahab had reached. Then he strode rapidly along Wahab's trail, but the cub had seen enough. He fled back over the divide into the Matissee Canyon, and realized, in his dim, bearish way, that he was at peace there, because the bare forage was so poor. As the summer came on, his coat was shed. His skin got very itchy, and he found pleasure in rolling in the mud and scraping his back against some convenient tree. He never climbed now. His claws were too long, and his arms, though growing big and strong,
Starting point is 00:30:48 were losing that suppleness of wrist that makes cub grizzlies and all black bear's great climbers. He now dropped naturally into the bear habit of seeing how high. he could reach with his nose on the rubbing post whenever he was near one. He may not have noticed it, yet each time he came to a post, after a week or two away, he could reach higher, for Wahab was growing fast and coming into his strength. Sometimes he was at one end of the country that he felt was his and sometimes at another. But he had frequent use of the rubbing tree, and thus it was that his range was mapped out by posts with his own mark on them.
Starting point is 00:31:30 One day, late in summer, he sighted a stranger on his land, a glossy black bear, and he felt furious against the interlober. As the black bear came nearer, Wahab noticed the tan red face, the white spot on his breast. Then the bit out of his ear,
Starting point is 00:31:49 and last of all, the wind brought a whiff. There could be no further doubt it was the very smell. This was the black black, coward that had chased him down the piny long ago. But how he had shrunken! Before he had looked like a giant!
Starting point is 00:32:06 Now, Wahab felt he could crush him with one paw. Revenge is sweet, Wahab felt, though he did not exactly say it. And he went for that red-nosed bear. But the black one went up a small tree like a squirrel. Wahab tried to follow as the other once followed him, but somehow he could not. he did not seem to know how to take hold now and after a while he gave it up and went away although the black bear brought him back more than once by coughing in duration later on that day when the grizzly passed again the red-nosed one was gone as the summer waned the upper forage grounds began to give out and wahab ventured down to the lower metisi one night to explore There was a pleasant odor on the breeze, and, following it up, Wahab came to the carcass of
Starting point is 00:33:02 a steer. A good distance away from it were some tiny coyotes, mere dwarfs compared with those you remembered. Right by the carcass was another that jumped about in the moonlight in a foolish way. For some strange reason it seemed unable to get away. Wahab's old hatred broke out. He rushed up. In a flash the coyote bit him several times. before with one blow of that great paw, Wahab smashed him into a limp, furry rag, then broke in all his ribs with a crunch or two of his jaws. Oh, but it was good to feel the hot bloody juices oozing between his teeth. The coyote was caught in a trap. Wahab hated the smell of the iron, so he went to the other side of the carcass, where it was not
Starting point is 00:33:52 so strong, and had eaten but little before clank, and his foot was caught in a wolf-trap that he had not seen. But he remembered that he had once before been caught and had escaped by squeezing the trap. He set a hind foot on each spring, and pressed till the trap opened and released his paw. About the carcass was the smell that he knew stood for man, so he left it and wondered downstream but more and more often he got whiffs of that horrible odor so he turned and went back to his quiet pinion benches end of part one part two of the biography of a grizzly by ernest thompson seton this librovox recording is in the public domain part two the days of his strength wahub's third summer had brought brought him the stature of a large-sized bear, though not nearly the Balkan power that
Starting point is 00:35:06 in time were his. He was very light-colored now, and that was why Spawat, a Shoshone Indian, who more than once hunted him, called him the white bear, or Wahab. Spawat was a good hunter, and as soon as he saw the rubbing tree on the upper Matizi, he knew that he was on the range of a big grizzling. He bushwhacked the whole valley and spent many days before he found a chance to shoot. Then Wahab got a stinging flesh wound in the shoulder. He growled horribly, but it had seemed to take the fight out of him.
Starting point is 00:35:42 He scrambled up the valley and over the lower hills till he reached a quiet haunt where he lay down. His knowledge of healing was wholly instinctive. He licked the wound and all around it and sought to be quiet. The licking removed the dirt. and by massage reduced the inflammation, and it plastered the hair down as a sort of dressing over the wound to keep out the air, dirt, and microbes. There could be no better treatment. But the Indian was on his trail.
Starting point is 00:36:15 Before long the smell warned Wahab that a foe was coming, so he quietly climbed farther up the mountain to another resting place. But again he sensed the Indians approach and made off. several times this happened and at length there was a second shot and another galling wound wab was furious now there was nothing that really frightened him but that horrible odor of man iron and guns that he remembered from the day when he lost his mother but now all fear of these left him he heaved painfully up the mountain again and along under a six-foot ledge then up and back to the top of the bank where he lay flat on came the indian armed with knife and gun deftly swiftly keeping on the trail gloating joyfully over each bloody print that meant much anguish to the hunted bear straight up the slide of broken rock he came where wahabhub Furious with pain, was waiting on the ledge. On sneak the dogged hunter, his eye still scanned the bloody slots or swept the woods ahead,
Starting point is 00:37:27 but never was raised to glance above the ledge. And Wahab, as he saw this shape of death, relentless on his track, and smell the hated smell, poised his bulk at heavy cost upon his quivering, mangled arm, there held until the proper instant came. then to his sound arms matchless native force he added all the weight of desperate hate as down he struck one fearful crushing blow The Indian sank without a cry, and then dropped out of sight. Wahab rose and sought again a quiet nook, for he might nurse his wounds. Thus he learned that one must fight for peace, for he never saw that Indian again,
Starting point is 00:38:16 and he had time to rest and recover. The years went on as before, except that each winter, Wahab slept less soundly, and each spring he came out earlier and was a bigger grizzly with fewer enemies that dared to face him when his sixth year came he was a very big strong sullen bear with neither friendship nor love in his life since that evil day on the lower piney no one had ever heard of wahab's mate no one believes that he ever had one the love season for bears came and went year after year but left him alone in his prime as he had been in his youth it is not good for a bear to be alone it is bad for him in every way his habitual moroseness grew with his strength and any one chancing to meet him now would have called him a dangerous grizzly he had lived in the metesee valley since first he betook himself there and his character had been shaped by many little adventures with traps and his wild rivals of the mountains but there was none of the latter that he now feared and he knew enough to avoid the first for that penetrating odor of man and iron was a never-feeling warning especially after an experience which befell him in his sixth year his ever reliable nose told him that there was a dead elk down among the timber he went up the wind and there sure enough was the great delicious carcass already torn open at the very best place
Starting point is 00:40:03 true there was that terrible man and iron taint but it was so slight and the feast so tempting that after circling around and inspecting the carcass from his eight feet of stature as he stood erect. He went cautiously forward, and at once was caught by his left paw in an enormous bear trap. He roared with pain and slashed about in fury, but this was no beaver trap. It was a big, forty-pound bear-catcher, and he was surely caught. Wahab fairly foamed with rage, and madly grit his teeth upon the trap. Then he remembered his former experiences. He placed the trap between his hind legs, with a hind paw on each spring, and pressed down with all his weight, but it was not enough. He dragged off the trap and its clog, and went clanking up the mountain. Again and again he tried to free his foot, but in vain,
Starting point is 00:41:08 till he came where a great trunk crossed the trail a few feet from the ground. By chance or happy thought, He reared again under this and made his new attempt. With a hind foot on each spring and his mighty shoulders underneath the tree, he bore down with his titanic strength. The great steel springs gave way, the jaws relaxed, and he tore out his foot. So Wahab was free again, though he left behind the great toe which had been nearly severed by the first snap of the steel. Again, Wahab had a painful wound to nurse, and as he was a left-handed bear, that is, when
Starting point is 00:41:52 he wished to turn a rock over, he stood on the right paw and turned with the left. One result of this disablement was to rob him for a time of all those dainty foods that are found under rocks or logs. The wound healed at last, but he never forgot that experience, and thenceforth the pungent smell of man and iron, even without the gun smell, never failed to enrage him. Many experiences had taught him that it is better to run if he only smelled the hunter or hurt him far away, but to fight desperately if the man was close at hand, and the cowboys soon came to know that the upper Matizi was the range of a bear that was better left alone. One day after a long absence, Wahab came into the lower part of his range and saw, to his
Starting point is 00:42:50 surprise, one of the wooden dens that men make for themselves. As he came around to get the wind, he sensed the taint that never failed to infuriate him now, and a moment later he heard aloud, bang! And felt a stinging shock in his left-hind leg, the old stiff-leg. he wheeled about in time to see a man running toward the new maid chanting had the shot been in his shoulder wahab would have been helpless but it was not mighty arms that could toss pine logs like broomsticks paws that with one tap could crush the biggest bull upon the range claws that could tear huge slabs of rock from the mountain side what was even the deadly rifle to them when the man's partner came home that night he found him on the reddened shanty floor the bloody trail from outside and a shaky scribbled note on the back of a paper novel told the tale it was wahab done it i seen him by the spray and wounded him i tried to get on the shanty but he catched me my god how i suffer jack it was all fair the man had invaded the bear's country had tried to try to
Starting point is 00:44:13 to take the bear's life and had lost his own. But Jack's partner swore he would kill that bear. He took up the trail and followed it up the canyon, and there bushwhacked and hunted day after day. He put out baits and traps, and at length one day he heard a crash-clatter thump, and a huge rock bounded down a bank into a wood, scaring out a couple of deer that floated away like Disseldown. Miller thought at first that it was a landslide, but he soon knew that it was Wahab that had rolled the boulder over merely for the sake of two or three ants beneath it. The wind had not betrayed him. So on peering through the bush, Miller saw the great bear as he fed, favoring his left hind-leg and growling sullenly to himself at a fresh twinge of pain.
Starting point is 00:45:09 Miller steadied himself and thought, "'Here goes a finisher or a dead miss.' He gave a sharp whistle, the bear stopped every move, and, as he stood with ears a cock, the man fired at his head. But at that moment the great shaggy head moved, only an infuriating scratch was given. The smoke betrayed the man's place, and the grizzly made savage three-legged haste to catch his furrow.
Starting point is 00:45:39 foe. Miller dropped his gun and swung lightly into a tree, the only large one near. Wahab raged in vain against the trunk. He tore off the bark with his teeth and claws, but Miller was safe beyond his reach. For fully four hours the grizzly watched, then gave it up and slowly went off into the bushes till lost to view. Miller watched him from the tree and afterward waited nearly. an hour to be sure that the bear was gone. He then slipped to the ground, got his gun, and set out for camp. But Wahab was cunning.
Starting point is 00:46:19 He had only seemed to go away and then had sneaked back quietly to watch. As soon as the man was away from the tree too far to return, Wahab dashed after him. In spite of his wounds, the bear could move the faster. Within a quarter of a mile, well, Wahab did just what the man had sworn to do to him. Long afterward his friends found the gun and enough to tell the tale. The claim shanty on the Matitzi fell to pieces. It never again was used, for no man cared to enter a country that had but few allurements
Starting point is 00:47:00 to offset its evident curse of ill-look, and, where such a terrible grizzly was always on the warpath. When they found good gold on the upper Matisse, miners came in pairs and wandered through the peaks, rooting up the ground and spoiling the little streams, grizzly old men, mostly, that had lived their lives in the mountain and were themselves slowly turning into grizzly bears,
Starting point is 00:47:28 digging and grubbing everywhere, not for good, wholesome roots, but for that shiny yellow sand that they could not eat, living the lives of Grizzlies asking nothing but to be let alone to dig. They seemed to understand Grizzly Wahab. The first time they met, Wahab reared up on his hind legs, and the wicked green lightnings began to twinkle in his small eyes.
Starting point is 00:47:55 The elder man said to his mate, "'Leave him alone, and he won't bother you.' "'Ain't he an awful size, though,' replied the other, nervously. Wahab was about to charge, but something held him back, a something that had no reference to his senses, that was felt only when they were still. A something that in bear and man is wiser than his wisdom, and that points the way at every doubtful fork in the dim and winding trail. Of course, Wahab did not understand what the men said, but he felt that there was something different here. The smell of man and arthur. was there, but not of that maddening kind, and he missed the pungent odor that even yet brought back the dark days of his cubhood. The men did not move, so Wahab rumbled a subterranean growl, dropped down on his four feet,
Starting point is 00:48:55 and went on. Late the same year, Wahab ran across the red-nosed black bear. How that bear did keep on shrinking! Bob could have hurled him across the gray bull with one tap now. But the black bear did not mean to let him try. He hustled his fat, podgy body up a tree at a rate that made him puff. Wahab reached up nine feet from the ground, and with one rake of his huge claws, tore off the bark clear to the shining white wood and down nearly to the ground,
Starting point is 00:49:31 and the black bear shivered and whimpered with terror as the scraping of those those awful claws ran up the trunk and up his spine in a way that was horribly suggestive. What was it that the sight of the black bear stirred in Wahab? Was it memories of the upper piney long forgotten? Thoughts of a woodland rich in food? Wahab left him trembling up there as high as he could get, and without any very clear purpose, swung along the upper branches of the Matissee, down to the gray bull around the foot of the Rimrock Mountain.
Starting point is 00:50:10 On, till hours later, he found himself in the timber tangle of the lower piney, and among the berries and ants of the old times. He had forgotten what a fine land the piney was. Plenty of food, no miners to spiral the streams, no hunters to keep an eye on, and no mosquitoes or flies, but plenty of open, sunny glades in sheltering woods, backed up by high, straight cliffs to turn the colder winds. There were, moreover, no resident grizzlies, no signs even of passing travelers, and
Starting point is 00:50:48 the black bears that were in possession did not count. Wahab was well pleased. He rolled his vast bulk in an old buffalo wallow, and rearing up against a tree where the Piney Canyon quits the Grey Bull Canyon, he left on it his mark, fully eight feet from the ground. In the days that followed, he wandered farther and further up the rugged spurs of the Shoshoneys, and took possession as he went. He found the sign-boards of several black bears, and if they were small dead trees, he
Starting point is 00:51:24 sent them crashing to earth with a drive of his giant paw. If they were green, he put his own mark over the other mark, and made it clearer by slashing the bark with the great pickaxes that grew on his toes. The upper piney had so long been a black bear range that the squirrels had ceased storing their harvest in hollow trees, and were now using the spaces under flat rocks where the black bears could not get at them. So Wahab found this a land of plenty. fourth or fifth rock in the pine woods was the roof of a squirrel or chipmunk granary.
Starting point is 00:52:03 And when he turned it over, if the little owner were there, Wahab did not scruple to flatten him with his paw and devour him as an agreeable relish to his own provisions. And wherever Wahab went, he put up his signboard, "'Tresspassers, beware.' It was written on the trees as high up as he could reach, and ever as ever. Everyone that came by understood that the scent of it and the hair in it were those of the great, grizzly Wahab. If his mother had lived to train him, Wahab would have known that a good range in spring
Starting point is 00:52:42 may be a bad one in summer. Wahab found out by years of experience that a total change with the seasons is best. In the early spring the cattle and elk ranges, with their winter-ke-kekeke-casses, offer a bountiful feast. In early summer the best forage is on the warm hill sides where the quamash and the Indian turnip grow. In late summer the berry bushes along the river flat are laden with fruit, and in autumn the pine woods gave good chances to fatten for the winter. So he added to his range each year.
Starting point is 00:53:19 He not only cleared out the black bears from the piney and the metitzi, but he went over the divide and killed that old fellow that had once chased him out of the Warhouse Valley. And more than that, he held what he had won, for he broke up a camp of tender feet that were looking for a ranch location on the middle Matissee. He stampeded their horses and made General Mash of the camp. And so all the animals, including man, came to know that the whole range from Frank's Peak to the Shoshone Spurs was the proper domain of a king well able to defend it, and the name of that king was Matitsi Wahhab. Any creature whose strength puts him beyond danger of open attack is apt to lose in cunning.
Starting point is 00:54:09 Yet Wahhab never forgot his early experience with the traps. He made it a rule never to go near that smell of man and iron, and that was the reason that he never again was caught. So he led his lonely life, and slouched around on the mountains, throwing boulders about like pebbles and huge trunks like matchwood, as he sought for his dilly food, and every beast of hill and plain soon came to know and fly in fear of Wahab, the one-time hunted persecuted cub. And more than one black bear paid with his life for the ill-deed of that other long ago, and many a cranky bobcat flying before him took to a tree, and if that tree were dead and dry,
Starting point is 00:54:59 Wahab heaved it down, and the tree and cat alike were dashed to bits. Even the proud-necked stallion, leader of the Mustang band, thought well for once to yield the road. The great gray timber wolves and the mountain lions, too, left their new kill and sneaked in sullen fear aside when Wahab appeared. And if, as he hulked across the sage-covered river flat, sending the scared antelope skimming like birds before him, he was faced perchance by some burly range bull,
Starting point is 00:55:33 too young to be wise and too big to be afraid, Wahab smashed his skull with one blow of that giant paw, and served him as the range, Kyle, would have served him long years ago. The All-Mother never fails to offer to her own, own twin cups one gall and one of balm little or much they may drink but equally of each the mountain that is easy to descend must soon be climbed again the grinding hardship of wahab's early days had built his mighty frame all usual pleasures of a grizzly's life had been denied him but power bestowed in him more than double share so he lived on year after year unsoftened by mate or companion, sullen, fearing nothing, ready to fight, but asking only
Starting point is 00:56:29 to be let alone, quite alone. He had but one keen pleasure in his somber life, the lasting glory in his matchless strength, the small but never feeling thrill of joy as the foe fell crushed and limp, or the riven-bowlders grit and heaved when he turned on them the measure of his wondrous force. everything has a smell of its own for those that have noses to smell wab had been learning smells all his life and knew the meaning of most of those in the mountains it was as though each and every thing had a voice of its own for him and yet it was far better than a voice for every one knows that a good nose is better than eyes and ears together and each of these myriads of voices kept on crying here and such am i The juniper berries, the rose hips, the strawberries, each had a soft, sweet little voice calling, Here we are, berries, berries.
Starting point is 00:57:34 The great pine woods had a loud far-reaching voice. Here we are the pine trees. And when he got right up to them, Wahab could hear the low, sweet call of the pinion nuts. Here we are the pinion nuts. and the quamash beds in May sang a perfect chorus when the wind was right, Quamash beds, quamash beds. And when he got among them, he made out a single voice. Each root had its own little piece to say to his nose,
Starting point is 00:58:07 Here I am, a big quamash, rich and ripe, or a tiny, sharp voice, Here I am, a good-for-nothing, stringy little root. And the broad, rich Rusals in the autumn called aloud, I am a fat, wholesome mushroom, and the deadly Amonita cried, I am an Aminita, let me alone or you'll be a sick bear. And the fairy hair bell of the canyon banks sang a song too, as fine as its thread-like stem, and as soft as its dainty blue, but the warden of the smells had learned to report it not,
Starting point is 00:58:46 for this and a million other such were of no interest to Wahab. So every living thing that moved and every flower that grew, and every rock and stone in shape on earth, told out its tail and sang its little story to his nose. Day or night, fog or bright, that great, moist nose, told him most of the things he needed to know, or past unnoticed those of no concern, and he depended on it more and more.
Starting point is 00:59:19 If his eyes and ears together reported so and so, he would not even then believe it until his nose said, Yes, that is right. But this is something that man cannot understand, for he has sold the birthright of his nose for the privilege of living in towns. While hundreds of smells were agreeable to Wahab, thousands were indifferent to him,
Starting point is 00:59:44 a good many were unpleasant, and some actually put him in a rage. He had often noticed that if a west wind were blowing when he was at the head of the Piny Canyon, there was an odd news scent. Some days he did not mind it, and some days it disgusted him, but he never followed it up. On other days a north wind from the high divide brought a most awful smell, something unlike any other, a smell that he wanted only to get away from. Wahhab was getting well past his youth now, and he began to have pains in the hind leg that had been wounded so often. After a cold night or a long time of wet weather, he could
Starting point is 01:00:32 scarcely use that leg, and one day, while thus crippled, the west wind came down the canyon with an odd message to his nose. Wahab could not clearly read the message. but it seemed to say, come, and something within him said, Go. The smell of food will draw a hungry creature and disgust a garged one. We do not know why, and all that anyone can learn is that the desire springs from a need of the body. So Wahab felt drawn by what had long disgusted him, and he slouched up the mountain path, grumbling to himself and slapping savagely back at branches
Starting point is 01:01:12 that chanced to switch his face. The odd odor grew very strong. It led him where he had never been before, up a bank of whitish sand, to a beach of the same color, where there was unhealthy-looking water running down, and a kind of fog coming out of a hole. Wahab threw up his nose suspiciously.
Starting point is 01:01:35 Such a peculiar smell! He climbed the bench. A snake wriggled across the sand in front. Wahab crushed it with a blow that made the near-trees shiver, and sent a balanced boulder toppling down, and he growled a growl that rumbled up the valley like distant thunder. Then he came to the foggy hole. It was full of water that moved gently and steamed.
Starting point is 01:02:03 Wahab put in his foot, and found it was quite warm, and that it felt pleasantly on his skin. he put in both feet and little by little went in farther causing the pool to overflow on all sides till he was lying at full length in the warm almost hot sulphur spring and sweltering in the greenish water while the wind drifted the steam about overhead there are plenty of these sulphur springs in the rockies but this chance to be the only one on wahab's range he lay in it for over an hour then feeling that he had had enough he heaved his huge bulk up on the bank and realized that he was feeling remarkably well and supple the stiffness of his hind leg was gone he shook the water from his shaggy coat a broad ledge in full sun-heat invited him to stretch himself out and dry but first he reared against the nearest tree and left a mark that none could mistake true there were plenty of signs of other animals using the sulphur bath for their ills but what of it thitsforth that tree bore this inscription in a language of mud hair and smell that every mountain creature could read my bath keep away signed wahab wahab lay on his belly till his back was dry then turned on his broad back and squirmed about in a ponderous way till the broiling sun had wholly dried him he realized that he was really feeling very well now
Starting point is 01:03:46 he did not say to himself i am troubled with that unpleasant disease called rheumatism and sulphur bath treatment is a thing to cure it but what he did know was i have dreadful pains i feel better when i am in this stinking pool so thenceforth he came back whenever the pains began again and each time he was cured end of part two part three of the biography of a grizzly by ernest's Thompson Seton. This Libravox recording is in the public domain. Part three. The waning. Years went by. Wahab grew no bigger.
Starting point is 01:04:38 There was no need for that. But he got whiter, crosser, and more dangerous. He really had an enormous range now. Each spring, after the winter storms had removed his notice boards, he went around and renewed them. It was natural to do so for, first of all, the scarcity of food compelled him to travel all over the range. There were lots of clay wallows at that season, and the itching of his skin as the winter coat began to shed, made the dressing of cool, wet clay very pleasant, and the exquisite pain of a good scratching
Starting point is 01:05:15 was one of the finest pleasures he knew. So, whatever his motive the result was the same. The signs were renewed each spring. At length the Pallet Ranch outfit appeared on the lower piney, and the men got acquainted with the ugly old fellow. The cow-punchers, when they saw him, decided they hadn't lost any bears, and they had better keep out of his way and let him mind his business.
Starting point is 01:05:44 They did not often see him, although his tracks and signboards were everywhere. But the owner of this outfit, a barn hunter, took a keen interest in wahab he learned something of the old bear's history from colonel picket and found out for himself more than the colonel ever knew he learned that wahab ranged as far south as the upper wiggins fork and north to the stinking water and from matizi to the shishonis he found out that wahab knew more about bear traps than most trappers do that he either passed them by or tore open the the other end of the bait-pin and dragged out the bait without going near the trap, and by accident or design, Wahab sometimes sprang the trap with one of the logs that formed the pin. This ranch owner found also that Wahab disappeared from his range each year during the heat
Starting point is 01:06:43 of the summer as completely as he did each winter during his sleep. Many years ago a wise government set aside the hill. had waters of the Yellowstone to be a sanctuary of wildlife forever. In the limits of this great wonderland, the ideal of the royal singer was to be realized, and none were to harm or make afraid. No violence was to be offered to any bird or beast, no axe was to be carried into its primitive forests, and the streams were to flow on forever unpolluted by mill or mine. All things were to bear witness that such as this was the West before the white man came.
Starting point is 01:07:29 The wild animals quickly found out all this. They soon learned the boundaries of this unfenced park, and as everyone knows, they show a different nature within its sacred levits. They no longer shun the face of man. They neither fear nor attack him, and they are even more tolerant of one another in this land of refuge. Peace and plenty are the sum of earthly good, so finding them here, the wild creatures crowd into the park from the surrounding country in numbers not elsewhere to be seen.
Starting point is 01:08:06 The bears are especially numerous about the Fountain Hotel. In the woods a quarter of a mile away is a smooth, open place where the steward of the hotel has all the broken and waste food put out daily for the bears, and the man whose work it is has become the steward of the bear's banquet. Each day it is spread, and each year there are more bears to partake of it. It is a common thing now to see a dozen bears feasting there at one time. They are of all kinds. Black, brown, cinnamon, grizzly, silver-tip, roachbacks, big and small, families and rangers from all parts of the vast surrounding country. All seem to realize that in the park no violence is allowed, and the most ferocious of
Starting point is 01:08:58 them have here put on a new behavior. Although scores of bears roam about this choice resort and sometimes quarrel among themselves, not one of them has ever yet harmed a man. Year after year they have come and gone. The passing travelers see them. The men of the hotel know many of them well. They know that they show up each summer during the short season when the hotel is in use, and that they disappear again, no man knowing whence they come or whither they go.
Starting point is 01:09:32 One day the owner of the Pallet Ranch came through the park. During his stay at the Fountain Hotel, he went to the Bear Banquet Hall at high mealtide. There were several black bears feasting, but they made way for a huge silver-tip grizzly that came about sundown. That, said the man who was acting as guide, is the biggest grizzly in the park, but he is a peaceable sort, or luh knows what had happened. That, said the ranchman, in astonishment, as the grizzly came hulking nearer and loomed
Starting point is 01:10:08 up like a load of hay among the piney pillars of the banquet hall. that if that is not matitsiwahub i never saw a bear in my life why that is the worst grizzly that ever rolled the log in the big horn basin it isn't possible said the other for he's here every summer july and august and i reckon he don't live so far away well that settles it said the ranchman july and august is just the time we miss him on the range and you can see for yourself that you can see for yourself that he'll be so far away-you-and-must is just the time we miss him on the range and you can see for yourself that he is a little lame behind and has lost a claw of his left front foot. Now I know where he puts in his summers, but I did not suppose that the old reprobate would know enough to behave himself away from home. The big grizzly became very well known during the successive hotel seasons. Only once did he really behave ill, and that was the first season he appeared, before he fully knew the ways of the park.
Starting point is 01:11:12 He wandered over to the hotel one day and in at the front door. In the hall he reared up his eight feet of stature as the guests fled in terror. Then he went into the clerk's office. The man said, All right, if you need this office more than I do, you can have it. And leaping over the counter, locked himself in the telegraph office to wire the superintendent of the park. Old grizzly in the office now seems to want to run hotel.
Starting point is 01:11:43 May we shoot? The reply came, No shooting in the park, use the hose. Which they did, and, wholly taken by surprise, the bear leaped over the counter too and ambled out the back way, with a heavy thud-thudding of his feet and a rattling of his claws on the floor. He passed through the kitchen as he went, and picking up a quarter of a beef.
Starting point is 01:12:08 took it along. This was the only time he was known to do ill, though on one occasion he was led into a breach of the peace by another bear. This was a large she-black bear, and a noted mischief-maker. She had a wretched, sickly cub that she was very proud of, so proud that she went out of her way to seek trouble on his behalf. And he, like all spoiled children, was the cause of much bad, feeling. She was so big and fierce that she could bully all the other black bears, but when
Starting point is 01:12:45 she tried to drive off old Wob she received a pat from his paw that sent her tumbling like a football. He followed her up and would have killed her, for she had broken the piece of the park, but she escaped by climbing a tree from the top of which her miserable little cub was apprehensively squealing at the pitch of his voice. So the affair was ended. In future the black bear kept out of Wahab's way, and he won the reputation of being a peaceable, well-behaved bear. Most persons believed that he came from some remote mountain
Starting point is 01:13:23 where were neither guns or traps to make him sullen and revengeful. Everyone knows that a bitter root grizzly is a bad bear. The Bitterroot Range is the roughest part of the mountains. The ground is everywhere cut up with deep ravines and overgrown with dense and tangled underbrush. It is an impossible country for horses and difficult for gunners, and there is any amount of good bear pasture. So there are plenty of bears and plenty of trappers. The roachbacks, as the Bitterroot Grizzlies are called,
Starting point is 01:14:01 are a cunning and desperate race. an old roachback knows more about traps than half a dozen ordinary trappers he knows more about plants and roots than a whole college of botanists he can tell to a certainty just when and where to find each kind of grub and worm and he knows by a whiff whether the hunter on his trail a mile away is working with guns poison dogs traps or all of them together and he has one general rule which is an endless puzzle to the hunter. Whatever you decide to do, do it quickly and follow it right up. So when a trapper and a roachback meet, the bear at once makes up his mind to run away as hard as he can, or to rush at the man and fight to a finish. The Grizzlies of the Badlands do not do this.
Starting point is 01:14:58 They used to stand on their dignity and growl like a thunderstorm, and so gave the hunters a chance to play their deadly lightning, and lightning is worse than thunder any day. Men can get used to growls that rumble along the ground and are up one's legs to the little house where one's courage lives, but bears cannot get used to forty-five-ninety soft-nosed bullets, and that is why the grizzlies of the badlands were all killed off. So the hunters have learned that they never know what a roachback will do, but they do know that he is going to be quick about it. Altogether these bitter root grizzlies have solved very well
Starting point is 01:15:41 the problem of life in spite of white men and are therefore increasing in their own wild mountains. Of course a range will hold only so many bears, and the increase is crowded out. So when that slim young ball-faced roachback found he could not hold the range he wanted, he went out perforce to seek his fortune, in the world.
Starting point is 01:16:06 He was not a big bear, or he would have not been crowded out, but he had been trained in a good school so that he was cunning enough to get on very well elsewhere. How he wandered down to the Salmon River Mountains and did not like them, how he traveled till he got among the barbed-wire fences of the snake-plains, and of course could not stay there. How a mere chance turned him from going eastward to the park. or he might have rested how he made for the snake river mountains and found more hunters than berries how he crossed into the teetons and looked down with disgust on the teeming man colony of jackson's hole does not belong to this history of wahab but when baldy roachback crossed the gross ventra range and over the wind river divide to the head of the gray bull he does come into the story just as he did into the story just as he did into the
Starting point is 01:17:04 country and the life of the Matissee Grizzly. The roachback had not found a man's sign since he left Jackson's hole, and here he was in a land of plenty of food. He feasted on all the delicacies of the season, and enjoyed the easy, brushless country till he came on one of Wahab's signpost. Tresspassers, beware, it said in the plainest manner. The roachback reared up against him. it.
Starting point is 01:17:35 Thunder, what a bear! The nose mark was a head and neck above Baldi's highest reach. Now a simple bear would have gone quietly away after this discovery, but Baldi felt that the mountain owed him a living, and here was a good one if he could keep out of the way of the big fellow. He nosed about the place, kept a sharp lookout for the present owner, and went on feeding wherever he ran across a good thing. A step or two from this ominous tree was an old pine stump.
Starting point is 01:18:11 In the bitter roots, there are often mice nests under such stumps, and Baldi jerked it over to sea. There was nothing. The stump rolled over against the signpost. Baldi had not yet made up his mind about it, but a new notion came into his cunning brain. He turned his head on this side. Then on that. He looked at the stump, then at the sign with his little pig-like eyes.
Starting point is 01:18:40 Then he deliberately stood up on the pine-root, with his back to the tree, and put his mark away up, a head at least above that of Wahab. He rubbed his back long and hard, and he sought some mud to smear his head and shoulders, then came back and made the mark so big, so strong, and so high, and emphasized it with such clog-ashes in the bark, that it could be read only in one way. A challenge to the present claimant from some monstrous invader who was ready, nay, anxious, to fight to a finish for this desirable range. Maybe it was accident and maybe design, but when the road was the road.
Starting point is 01:19:27 Roachback jumped from the route. It rolled to one side. Baldi went on down the canyon, keeping the keenest lookout for his enemy. It was not long before Wahab found the trail of the interloper, and all the ferocity of his outside-the-park nature was aroused. He followed the trail for miles on more than one occasion, but the small bear was quick-footed as well as quick-witted and never showed himself. He made a point, however, of calling at each signpost, and if there was any means of cheating, so that his mark might be put higher,
Starting point is 01:20:07 he did it with a vim, and left a big showy record. But if there was no chance for any but a fair register, he would not go near the tree, but look for a fresh tree nearby with some log or side ledge to reach from. Thus, Wahab soon found the interloper's marks towering far above his own, a monstrous bear, evidently that even he could not be sure of mastering. But Wahab was no coward.
Starting point is 01:20:39 He was ready to fight to affinish anyone that might come, and he hunted the range for that invader. Day after day Wahab sought for him and held himself ready to fight. He found his trail daily, and more than his trail daily, and more than he was a man. More and more often he found that towering record far above his own. He often smelled him on the wind, but he never saw him, for the old grizzly's eyes had grown very dim of late years. Things but a little way off were mere blurs to him.
Starting point is 01:21:11 The continual menace could not but fill Wahab with uneasiness, for he was not young now and his teeth and claws were worn and blunted. He was more than ever troubled with peasant. pains in his old wounds, and though he could have risen on the spur of the moment to fight any number of grizzlies of any size, still the continual apprehension, the knowledge that he must hold himself ready at any moment to fight this young monster, weighed on his spirits and began to tell on his general health. The roachback's life was one of continual vigilance, always ready to run, doubling, and shifting
Starting point is 01:21:52 to avoid the encounter that must mean instant death to him. Many a time from some hiding place he watched the great bear and trembled lest the wind should betray him. Several times his very impudence saved him, and more than once he was nearly cornered in a box canyon. Once he escaped only by climbing up a long crack in a cliff which Wahab's huge frame could not have entered. But still, in a madman.
Starting point is 01:22:22 persistence, he kept on marking the trees farther into the range. At last he scented and followed up the sulfur bath. He did not understand it at all. It had no appeal to him, but hereabouts were the tracks of the owner. In a spirit of mischief, the roachback scratched dirt into the spring, and then seeing the rubbing tree, he stood sidewise on the rocky ledge and was thus able to put his mark, fully five feet above that of Wahab. Then he nervously jumped down and was running about, defiling the bath and keeping a sharp
Starting point is 01:23:03 lookout when he heard a noise in the woods below. Instantly he was all alert. The sound drew near. Then the wind brought the sure proof, and the roachback, in terror, turned and fled into the woods. It was Wahab. He had been feeling in health of late. His old pains were on him again, and as well as his hind leg,
Starting point is 01:23:30 had seized his right shoulder, where were still lodged two rifle-balls. He was feeling very ill and crippled with pain. He came up the familiar bank at a jerky limp, and there caught the odor of the foe. Then he saw the track in the mud. His eyes said the track of a small bear, but his eyes were dim now. and his nose his unerring nose said this is the track of the huge invader then he noticed the tree with his sign on it and there beyond doubt was the stranger's mark far above his own his eyes and nose were agreed on this and more they told him that the foe was close at hand might at any moment come wahab was feeling ill and weak with pain he was in no mood for a desperate fight a battle against such odds would be madness now so without taking the treatment he turned and swung along the bench away from the direction taken by the stranger
Starting point is 01:24:38 the first time since his cubhood that he had declined to fight that was a turning-point in wahab's life if he had followed up the stranger he would have found the miserable little craven trembling cowering in an agony of terror behind a log in a natural trap a walled up glade only fifty yards away and would surely have crushed him had he even taken the bath his strength and courage would have been renewed and if not then at least in time he would have met his foe and his after-life would have been different but he had turned this was the fork in the trail but he had no means of knowing it he limped along skirting the lower spurs of the shishonis and soon came to the fork in the trail but he had no means of knowing it he limped along skirtinging the lower spurs of the shishonis and soon came to the and soon came on that horrid smell that he had known for years but never followed up or understood it was right in his road and he traced it to a small barren ravine that was strewn over with skeletons and dark objects and wahab as he passed smelled a smell of many different animals and knew by its quality that they were lying dead in this treeless grassless hollow for there was a clef in the rocks at the upper end, whence poured a deadly gas, invisible but heavy. It filled the little gulch like a brimming poison-bowl, and at the lower end there was a steady overflow. But Wahab knew only that the air that poured from it as he passed made him dizzy and sleepy
Starting point is 01:26:16 and repelled him, so that he got quickly away from it and was glad once more to breathe the piney wind. Once Wahab decided to retreat, It was all too easy to do so the next time, and the result worked double disaster. For since the big stranger was allowed possession of the sulfur spring, Wahab felt that he would rather not go there. Sometimes when he came across the traces of his foe, a spurt of his old courage would come back. He would rumble that thunder growl as of old,
Starting point is 01:26:52 and go painfully lumbering along the trail to settle the thing right then and there. but he never overtook the mysterious giant and his rheumatism growing worse now that he was barred from the cure soon made him daily less capable of either running or fighting sometimes wahab would sense his foes approach when he was in a bad place for fighting and without really running he would yield to a wish to be on a better footing where he would have a fair chance this better footing never led him near to his own to be on a better footing where he would have a fair chance this better footing never led him the enemy, for it is well known that the one awaiting has the advantage. Some days, Wahab felt so ill that it would have been madness to have staked anything on a fight, and when he felt well or a little better, the strangers seemed to keep away. Wahab soon found that the stranger's track was most often on the warhouse and the west slope of the piney, the very best feeding grounds. To avoid these, when he did not feel
Starting point is 01:27:58 equal to fighting was only natural. And as he was always in more or less pain now, it amounted to abandoning to the stranger the best part of the range. Weeks went by. Wahab had meant to go back to his bath, but he never did. His pains grew worse. He was now crippled in his right shoulder as well as in his hind leg. The long strain of waiting for the fight begot anxiety.
Starting point is 01:28:27 that grew to be apprehension, which, with the sapping of his strength, was breaking down his courage, as it always must when courage is founded on muscular force. His daily care now was not to meet and fight the invader, but to avoid him till he felt better. Thus, that first little retreat grew into one long retreat. Wahab had to go farther and further down the piney to avoid an encounter. he was daily worst fed and as the weeks went by was dearly less able to crush a foe he was living and hiding at last on the lower piny the very place where once his mother had brought him with his little brothers the life he led now was much like the one he had led after that dark day perhaps for the same reason if he had had a family of his own all might have been different as he limped along one morning seeking among the barren aspen groves for a few roots or the wormy partridge berries that were too poor to interest the squirrel on the grouse
Starting point is 01:29:36 he heard a stone rattle down the western slope into the woods and a little later on the wind was born the dreaded taint he waded through the ice-cold piney once he would have leaped it and the chill water sent through and up each great hairy limb keen pains the that seemed to reach his very life. He was retreating again. Which way? There seemed but one way now, toward the new ranch house. But there were signs of stir about it long before he was near enough to be seen.
Starting point is 01:30:13 His nose, his trusted friend, said, Turn, turn and seek the hills. And turn he did, even at the risk of meeting there the dreadful foe. He limped, pain, along the north bank of the piney, keeping in the hollows and among the trees. He tried to climb a cliff that of old he had bounded up at full speed, when half-way up his footing gave way and down he rolled to the bottom.
Starting point is 01:30:40 A long way round was now the only road, for onward he must go, on, on. But where? There seemed no choice now but to abandon the whole range to the terrible. stranger. And feeling, as far as the bear can feel, that he is fallen, defeated, dethroned at last, that he is driven from his ancient range by a bear too strong for him to face, he turned up the west fork, and the lot was strong. The strength and speed were gone from his once mighty limbs.
Starting point is 01:31:18 He took three times as long as he once would to mount each well-known ridge, and as he went He glanced backward from time to time to know if he were pursued. Away up the head of the little branch were the Shoshone's bleak forbidding. No enemies were there, and the park was beyond it all. On, on, he must go. But he climbed with shaky limbs and short uncertain steps. The west wind brought the odor of death gulch, that fearful little valley where everything was dead, where the very air was deadly.
Starting point is 01:31:54 it used to disgust him and drive him away but now wahab felt that it had a message for him he was drawn by it it was in his line of flight and he hobbled slowly toward the place he went nearer nearer until he stood upon the entering ledge a vulture that had descended to feed on one of the victims was slowly going to sleep on the untouched carcass wahab swung his great grizzled muzzle and his long white beard in the wind the odor that he once had hated was attractive now there was a strange biting quality in the air his body craved it for it seemed to numb his pain and it promised sleep as it did that day when he first saw the place far below him to the right end to the left and on and on as far as the eye could reach was the great kingdom that once had been his where he had lived for years in the glory of his strength where none had dared to meet him face to face the whole earth could show no view more beautiful but wahab had no thought of its beauty he only knew that it was a good land to live in that it had been his but that now it was gone for his strength was gone and he was flying to seek a place where he could rest and be at peace away over the shoshone's indeed was the road to the park but it was far far away with a doubtful end to the long doubtful journey but why so far here in this little gulch was all he sought here was peace and painless sleep he knew it for his nose his never-earing nose his never-earing nose
Starting point is 01:33:47 said here, here, now. He paused a moment at the gate, and as he stood the wind-born fumes began their subtle work. Five were the faithful warders of his life, and the best and trusteeest of them all flung open wide the door he long had kept. A moment still Wahab stood in doubt. His lifelong guide was silent now, had given up his post. but another sense he felt within. The angel of the wild things was standing there, beckoning in the little veil. Wahab did not understand.
Starting point is 01:34:28 He had no eyes to see the tear in the angel's eyes, nor the pitying smile that was surely on his lips. He could not even see the angel, but he felt him beckoning, beckoning. A rush of his ancient courage surged in the grizzly. his rugged breast. He turned aside into the little gulch. The deadly vapors entered in, filled his huge chest, and tingled in his vast heroic limbs, as he calmly lay down on the rocky, herbless floor, and as gently went to sleep, as he did that day in his mother's arms by the gray bull long ago. End of Part 3. End of The Biography of a Grizzly by Ernest Thompson Seton.
Starting point is 01:35:18 Hope you enjoyed it.

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